Dear monks, I need to consult your wisdom. Consider:

use strict; sub do_nothing { @_ } my @in = qw( e n i g m a ); my @out = sort do_nothing( @in ); print "@out\n"; __END__ % perl enigma.pl e n i g m a
To elucidate this puzzle, I consulted the inscrutably wise (though still fallible) -MO=Deparse:
% perl -MO=Deparse enigma.pl sub do_nothing { use strict 'refs'; @_; } use strict 'refs'; my(@in) = ('e', 'n', 'i', 'g', 'm', 'a'); my(@out) = (sort do_nothing @in); print "@out\n"; __DATA__ enigma.pl syntax OK
So perl is interpreting sort do_nothing( @in ) as sort do_nothing @in, which, given the explicit use of parentheses, seems to me beyond perverse.

Is this a bug or is this a feature?

the lowliest monk


In reply to Perversity of sorts by tlm

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